Couldnât stay away, could you? she mouths to me behind Tessaâs back. That woman is the biggest ballbuster around; Iâm not sure how Christian puts up with her, and willingly at that.
âYou can stay in the room across from Tessaâs, she can show you,â Kimberly announces and then disappears.
I detach myself from Tessa and give her a little smile.
âIâIâm sorry!â Tessa stutters, looking around the room and blushing. âI donât know why I did that. I-itâs just nice to see a familiar face.â
âItâs good to see you, too,â I tell her, trying to free her of her embarrassment. Itâs not like I let go because I didnât want to hold her. Her lack of confidence always has her interpret things in negative ways.
âI slipped on the floor,â she blurts out, then flushes again as I bite down on the inside of my cheek, trying my best not to laugh at her.
âYeah, I saw it.â I canât help the small chuckle that escapes from me, and she shakes her head, laughing at herself.
âAre you really staying?â she asks.
âYes, if thatâs okay with you?â
Her eyes are bright and a lighter shade of blue-gray than usual. Her hair is down, slightly wavy and unstyled. Not a trace of makeup mars her complexion, and she looks absolutely fucking perfect. The number of hours that Iâve spent picturing her face in front of me did not adequately prepare me for the moment when Iâm finally able to look at her again. My mind canât possibly catch all of her, all the details . . . the freckle just below her neckline, the curve of her lips, the brilliance of her eyesâitâs fucking impossible.
Her T-shirt hangs loose on her body, and those hideous fluffy cloud pants cover her legs. She keeps adjusting her shirt, tugging it down, playing with the collar; sheâs the only girl Iâve ever seen who can manage to wear these ugly-ass clothes to bed but somehow still look so damn sexy. Through the white shirt, I can see her black bra . . . sheâs wearing that black lace one that I love. I wonder if sheâs aware that I can see right through her shirt . . .
âWhat changed your mind? And whereâs the rest of your stuff?â Tessa asks as she leads me down the hallway. âEveryone elseâs rooms are upstairs,â she informs me, unaware of my perverted thoughts. Or maybe sheâs not . . .
âThis is all I brought. Itâs only for one night,â I tell her, and she stops in front of me.
âYouâre only staying one night?â she says, her eyes searching my face.
âYeah, what did you think? That I was moving here?â Of course she did. She always has too much faith in me.
âNo.â She looks away. âI donât know, I thought a little longer than that, though.â And now this is where it gets awkward. I knew it would.
âHereâs the room.â She opens the door for me, but I donât step inside.
âYour room is just across the hall?â My voice breaks, and I sound like a damned fool.
âYeah,â she mutters, looking down at her fingers.
âCool,â I remark dumbly. âYouâre sure itâs okay that Iâm here, right?â
âYes, of course. You know I missed you.â
The excitement on her face seems to vanish as the memory of my previous actionsâbeing an asshole in general, and refusing to come to Seattle specificallyâlooms unspoken over our heads. Iâll never forget the way she ran to me, literally, when she saw me at the door; there was such emotion on her face, so much longing, and I felt it, too, more than she did. Iâve been insane without her.
âYeah, but the last time that we saw one another in that apartment I was basically kicking you out.â I watch her face change as my words remind her of what took place. I can literally see the fucking wall rising up between us as she gives me a fake smile. âI donât know why I brought that up,â I say and wipe my wrist across my forehead.
Her eyes move to another room; her room. Then turning to the door weâre standing in front of, she says, âYou can put your stuff in here.â
Grabbing my bag from me, she heads inside and unzips it on the bed. I watch as she pulls the wadded-up T-shirts and boxers out of the bag and scrunches her nose.
âAre these clean?â she asks.
I shake my head. âThe boxers are.â
She holds the bag at armâs length. âI donât even want to know what the apartment looks like.â
The corners of her mouth lift into a smug smile. âGood thing you wonât ever see it again, then,â I tease her. Her smile fades.
What a shitty jokeâwhat the fuck is wrong with me?
âI didnât mean it that way,â I say quickly, desperate to recover from my poor choice of words.
âItâs fine. Relax, okay?â Her voice is gentle. âItâs only me, Hardin.â
âI know.â I take a deep breath and continue, âIt just feels like itâs been so fucking long, and weâre in that weird middle, half-relationship shit that we are really shitty at. And we havenât seen each other, and Iâve just missed you, and I hope you missed me, too.â Wow, I really said that all way too fast.
She smiles. âI did.â
âYou did what?â I press for the exact words.
âI missed you. I told you that every day weâve talked.â
âI know.â I step closer to her. âI just wanted to hear it again.â I reach out and tuck her hair behind her ears, using both hands, and she leans into me.
âWhen did you get here?â a small voice suddenly says, and Tessa jumps away from me.